"They fill the
confines of your room with sound" and effectively vanish as the sources of that
sound; "images are reasonably specific and easy to discern, but its the size of
the stage that is so inspiring"; "clear, detailed, and precise without ever
being irritating or edgy."

Features

"A sloping
baffle [angles] the 6 1/2" Pure Titanium Deposit Hybrid woofer back just right,
and then the woofer and the 1" Pure Titanium Hybrid tweeter [fire] upward into
what [Mirage calls] an OmniGuide" to create 360-degree dispersion.

Use

"These speakers
need to use the room"; therefore, "you do want to get these
speakers fairly close to boundaries to help reinforce the bass , but you dont
want to get them too close and 'suffocate' them . And you dont want to get them
too far from the walls because they need those walls to reflect the sound."

Value

"Its the
OMNI 60 that really marks the beginnings of Omnipolar technology at a price where
more people can partake of it."

If youre well versed in the history of
Canadian speaker manufacturer Mirage, you cant help but remember the M1 loudspeaker
of the late 80s. The M1 was a point of departure -- for Mirage and for
loudspeakers in general. The front- and rear-mounted driver array of the M1 -- an
effective doubling up of drivers, all operating in phase -- flat out changed the way we
thought about loudspeakers. The M1 did cause a bit of head-scratching. Many audiophiles
wondered aloud, "How can a speaker radiate toward and away from the listener
and still sound good? With all that sound going every which way, shouldnt the M1
sound slow, blurry, and indistinct -- or at the very least, odd?" The Mirage M1 most
certainly didnt sound odd; in fact, it sounded quite miraculous.

But there is a reason for this. Whether its
in a concert hall or in our listening room, the sound we hear at the listening position is
a combination of direct and reflected sound, all arriving in a short-enough
timeframe that we hear it as a single event. And even forward-firing loudspeakers, which
generate sound mostly in front of them, do radiate to their sides and rear as well.
Regardless of the loudspeaker technology, the combined radiation of sound from the
front, side, rear or where have you is heard at the listening position. When creating the
M1, Mirage used that knowledge, in turn creating a loudspeaker that worked with the
room like few others before it.

But building a speaker like the M1 isnt
cheap; just look at the more expensive Mirage OM series even today -- these speakers still
use front- and rear-firing drivers and complex cabinets to create the dispersion of sound
that is Mirage's goal. All those parts add to the cost, and thats what has kept
Mirages Omnipolar technology out of reach for budget-conscious audiophiles -- until
now.

Fifteen years after the birth of the M1,
obviously inspiration struck at Mirage headquarters in the form of technology that
squeezes a 360-degree radiation pattern from a single two-driver array. The first design
using this technology was the groundbreaking OMNISAT, which I reviewed as part of the
OMNISAT 6 home-theater speaker system at SoundStage! Network sister site Home Theater
& Sound. This design was such a success that Mirage saw value in extending the
concept beyond that initial small speaker. The $600 USD OMNI 60s are second up in the new
OMNI series speakers and should be considered by anyone intrigued by Omnipolar sound but
previously unable to afford it.

Description

Achieving 360-degree dispersion from a two-driver
system certainly isnt easy, but when you look at the ingenious way Mirage went about
doing it -- by constructing a sloping baffle to angle the 6 1/2" Pure Titanium
Deposit Hybrid woofer back just right, and then firing the woofer and the 1" Pure
Titanium Hybrid tweeter upward into what they call an OmniGuide -- it almost forces you to
say, "Why didnt I think of that?" I can only say that even if you had
thought of it, you would have only been at step one. Step two would have been as much, if
not more, work.

Take a close look at the OmniGuide from the side
and youll see that the drivers are not centered perfectly under it -- the midpoint
of the Guide is back a touch from the middle of each driver. Thats deliberate,
not a manufacturing mistake. Then theres the precise angle at which the OmniGuide is
set, not to mention the shape of the Guide itself. Deliberate again, and Im
willing to bet that a bunch of guys with pocket protectors burned the midnight oil getting
it to work as desired. But they pulled it off -- remarkably well, in fact.

What Mirage has created is a
360-degree-dispersion speaker with a bias toward the front. In other words, the
OMNI 60 doesnt disperse its sound evenly around the cabinet -- thats why the
drivers are slanted and the OmniGuide is positioned the way it is. The goal is to get a
smooth dispersion pattern over 360 degrees with somewhat more energy to the front of the
speaker. This, Mirage says, sounds more natural than the dispersion of other
omnidirectional speakers that fire sound evenly in all directions.

OMNI measurements

Even though we measured the Mirage OMNI 60s in the NRCs
anechoic chamber using our standardized methodology, conventional measurements like those
we produce are meant for, well, conventional speakers, and they dont tell the
same story with a speaker like the OMNI 60. When you understand how measurements are done,
its much easier as to why this is so.

Measuring a forward-firing speaker in an anechoic chamber
is a snap. Take the sensitivity measurement, for example: Simply place the microphone
directly in front of the loudspeakers tweeter at a prescribed distance and capture
the sound, echo-free -- exactly what you want. Remember, though, that the OMNI 60's
drivers dont fire straight ahead in the same way; the speaker disperses more energy
to the sides and rear than a front-firing speaker. All that side and rear energy gets lost
in an anechoic chamber and doesnt get accounted for in something like a sensitivity
measurement. You run into similar problems with frequency response, for largely the same
reasons.

That doesnt mean an anechoic chamber is flawed; in
fact, just as with a conventional speaker, its the best place in which to get an
accurate measurement of what the speaker is doing on its own. However, the OMNI 60
measurements must be interpreted differently. It's also best to do a lot more
measurements, and some different measurements, too. Optimally, you need to measure the
speakers output across 360-degree space. What weve done is produce our
standard set of measurements, and then include three additional measurement charts that
show the off-axis response deviation (at 60, 120, and 180 degrees) from the on-axis
response (0 degrees; i.e., directly in front).

Interpreting measurements for a speaker like the OMNI 60
takes knowledge and skill. In the end, the review and measurement processes can only go so
far in helping to shed light on such a speaker.

Certainly, the unique technology takes a bit to
wrap your head around, but there are more conventional aspects to the OMNI 60s
design. As with all other speakers, the OMNI 60 has a traditional crossover, with the
tweeter handing off to the woofer at about 2kHz. The nominal impedance is 8 ohms, and
theres a 4-ohm dip in the bass. On the back of the speaker there is a single set of
high-quality five-way binding posts. On the front there is a large port that helps
increase bass response.

The OMNI 60s frequency response is said to
be 45Hz to 20kHz +/- 3dB. Sensitivity is said to be 91dB "in-room." However, in
terms of the measurements, things get a little wonky again, mostly because of the way the
speaker distributes its sound.

Quite literally capping off the OMNI 60s is a
nifty two-piece grille that is again a little unconventional, but only unconventional to
make the speaker look more conventional. In fact, its not so much a grille as
it is a hood that you first snap on the top and then snap on the front. Once
installed, it makes the rather space-age-looking OMNI 60s into a sleeker and more
normal-looking design. In fact, all decked out with their grilles and in either the black
or cherry vinyl veneer with gray trim that they come in, the 16"H x 9"W x
12"D OMNI 60s are one of the sharper-looking speakers Ive seen at their price.

Setup

I first used the OMNI 60s with Simaudios
100Wpc i-3 integrated amplifier. The amply powered i-3 charged the speakers up with ease.
Although I never planned to use the OMNI 60s with tube-based electronics, when I finished
my auditioning of the Von Schweikert VR-1 loudspeakers one day and found myself with
speaker wires dangling from Zanden Audios 30Wpc Model 600 amplifier, I couldnt
resist connecting the OMNI 60s. Despite the modest power rating of the Zanden Model 600,
it worked just fine, indicating to me that the OMNI 60s are reasonably sensitive and not
all that difficult a load. Would I go for an ultra-low-powered amp of, say, 20Wpc or less?
Likely not -- the OMNI 60 isnt a high-efficiency design. But as I said, 30 watts did
seem adequate in my modestly sized room. Other equipment included the Simaudio Nova CD
player along with a mish-mash of Nirvana Audio and Maple Audio Works cables.

You have to take some care setting up the OMNI 60
speakers, but this differs somewhat from setting up a conventional loudspeaker. You do want
to get these speakers fairly close to boundaries to help reinforce the bass -- they are
pretty small and have limited output down low -- but you dont want to get them too
close and "suffocate" them because they need to breathe a bit. And you
dont want to get them too far from the walls because they need those walls to
reflect the sound. Remember, these speakers need to use the room. When placing the
speakers, I left about two feet to each side, about three feet behind, and raised the OMNI
60s onto a pair of 24"-high stands, which were ideal for my room and listening
position. I used some Blu-Tack to couple the OMNI 60s to the stands, as I do for most
speakers I review.

Sound: part one

The OMNI 60s are a radical design, so its
not surprising, then, that they sound quite a bit different from other speakers,
regardless of price. Suffice it to say, they are distinct -- and heres how.

Frankly, at first its hard to get a grip on
the OMNI 60s tonal balance and other attributes until you get over what they do with
space. By that I mean how they fill the confines of your room with sound. Ive
heard many speakers "disappear" and provide a collage of sound -- most notably
the other Mirage speakers Ive reviewed in the past, such as the OM-7s and the
OMNISATs, along with just a handful of others like Von Schweikerts new VR-1 that I
just reviewed. But even those speakers dont do space as successfully as the OMNI 60s
do.

I put Glenn Goulds A State of Wonder:
The Complete Goldberg Variations 1955 & 1981 [Sony Classical 87703] in the
Simaudio player and let 'er rip. Other than the visual clues of the speakers
themselves -- along with the obvious fact that with a stereo recording the sound is
emanating from a source ahead of your listening position -- this is not some
surround-sound miracle from just two speakers. The OMNI 60s effectively vanished without
any of that "the sound is coming from here and there" that plagues most
conventional speakers. On went the soundtrack to the movie The Mission [Virgin
90567-2] and out came a chorus with dimensions that far outsized my room. The OMNI 60
isnt as hyper-precise in terms of floating its images as something like the Focus
Audio Signature FS-688 (which, by the way, are $2600 per pair) or even the VR-1 (closer
priced at $995 per pair), so I couldnt necessarily pick out each singer with a laser
pointer, but the OMNI 60s are not loose or obscure in any way. The images are
reasonably specific and easy to discern, but its the size of the stage that is so
inspiring.

I obviously enjoyed being immersed by the OMNI
60s spacious sound and this, understandably, is one of the designs strengths.
In fact, once you hear the spaciousness you may be so overwhelmed that youll rush
out to get the OMNI 60s based on that alone. However, its important to listen to
them for a while. Even though I lost my Omnipolar virginity some years ago, it still took
me some time to get used to the unique sound of the OMNI 60s, and it was after that point
I could make better judgments about the speakers' other characteristics.

Sound: part two

Mirage speakers of the late 80s and early
90s were often characterized as dark -- meaning weighty on the bottom, full through
most everywhere, but rather subdued on the top. While the OMNI 60s arent all that
weighty -- they are a fairly small two-way design, after all, with
reasonable-but-certainly-not-extraordinary bass extension -- their room-filling sound
helps them to sound fuller, and the high frequencies are anything but subdued.

When the top end of Goulds piano was
struck, the high-frequency extension seemed good without any type of obvious roll-off
occurring. The sound was also clear, detailed, and precise without ever being irritating
or edgy. Of course, this is quite a pristine-sounding recording -- lots of systems sound
good with it -- so I wanted to also try the OMNI 60s with a recording that has a little
more edge. The Very Best of Cat Stevens [A&M 541387] is a clear-sounding album,
but also one with a digitally top end that can act as razor blades in your ears
through cheap-sounding tweeters. The OMNI 60s are smooth, clean, detailed, and certainly
not fatiguing even on recordings like this. Certainly, they show the flaws and dont
mask them, but they dont exacerbate them at all either, and thats important.
Given the reasonable price the OMNI 60s sell for, I was nothing but impressed at how their
tweeter behaves.

As I said, the bass of the OMNI 60s isnt
all that deep. However, the speakers go much deeper than the lower-priced, smaller-sized
OMNISATs, which require a subwoofer to flesh them out and make them usable for music
listening and movie watching. What the OMNI 60s lack in bass depth they make up for in
strength along with a round and bloomy type of sound that adds fullness to the bottom end.
This was apparent on Norah Jones "Come Away with Me" (Come Away with Me
[Blue Note 32088]). The OMNI 60s dont have the same kind of depth and rattle-ya
detail that larger speakers have, and that extra bit of bloom does obscure low-end detail
some, but the roundness down low is also pleasant, and it certainly keeps the speaker from
sounding thin and subwoofer-needy.

So unlike the OMNISATs, the OMNI 60s have enough
bass to satisfy a good number of music listeners, including myself; but still, I must warn
you that if you do have a predilection for truly deep, rumble-your-butt-off bass, look to
add a sub -- simple as that. In Mirages world, there is no shortage. I use their
$500 LF-150 with the OMNISATs as part of the OMNISAT 6 package, and I find it to give
tight, tuneful, butt-rumbling bass suitable for quite a large room. Theres also a
less expensive and smaller LF-100.

I was impressed to find the OMNI 60s
midrange largely neutral-sounding -- neither laid-back nor forward. This was a pleasant
surprise given how vast the stage they set is and how much image depth you can get.
Oftentimes when a speaker has exceptional depth, I also find it to be noticeably recessed
in the mids. Not so with the OMNI 60s; they can place voices starkly and clearly, neither
up front nor recessed. The one caveat, though, is a bit of a hollow sound, particularly on
voices, and, for example, the lower end of a guitar. With either Lou Reeds or John
Cales voices on Songs for Drella [Warner Brothers 26205] it manifested itself
with cuppiness and chestiness that room placement and system fine-tuning couldnt
quite cure. With female vocals like Ani DiFranco's on Evolve [Righteous Babe
Records RBR030-D] there wasnt the chestiness, but the slight cuppy quality was still
apparent.

Is this a fault of Mirages innovative OMNI
technology? I dont think so. First, the OMNISATs dont do it. Second, I made a
point of feeling the cabinet when the speaker was playing male vocals. The cabinet walls
resonate a little bit, unlike the cabinet of the ultra-dense OMNISAT, which does not, and
Im thinking that this may be contributing to that slight coloration I hear with the
OMNI 60s. It more or less points to that age-old problem of only being able to make a
wood-based cabinet so dead when the speaker is priced as reasonably as this one is.

Similar, but different

Playing the Von Schweikert VR-1 and the OMNI 60
side by side is interesting, but shouldnt be considered an apples-to-apples
comparison given that the $995 VR-1 costs much more than the OMNI 60s. What this exercise
does, though, is effectively demonstrate the differences between two good bookshelf
loudspeakers using different technologies -- although it should also be pointed out that
even though the VR-1 is a front-firer, the company designs it to be a wide-dispersion
speaker, with goals similar to those that Mirage is trying to achieve.

Visually, the two speakers illustrate
conventional versus radical design. The OMNI 60 is space-age looking. The wood-clad VR-1,
even though it is finished very nicely, looks far less adventurous. Its the OMNI
60s, frankly, that will get people looking. Sonically, though, they have more in common
than their appearance would indicate.

Both speakers charge a room with sound evenly.
Once properly set up, both speakers sound good from all over the place, not just from the
head-in-the-vise center spot. And as you move around the room, the tonal balance stays
largely the same, which speaks quite well for the more traditional VR-1, but its the
Omnipolar OMNI 60s that stay almost exactly the same wherever you go -- and
thats the strength of the Omnipolar technology. Walk to the front, sides, and even
behind the OMNI 60s -- its disconcerting how little the sound changes, and no other
speakers I know of other than those from Mirage and some 360-degree radiators do that. So
while the VR-1s stay impressively similar throughout the room, they just cant match
the OMNI 60s, particularly when you get behind the speakers. And like its little brother,
the OMNISAT, the OMNI 60 is uncanny in how directionless it sounds even when you get close
to it. Theres an eerie non-specificness as it radiates sound, even at close
range, and that contributes to the miraculous ability to disappear.

Both the VR-1 and OMNI 60 speakers sound bigger
than their dimensions let on. In my review of the VR-1, I applauded the speaker for its
room-swelling presentation, but as I said, the OMNI 60 gets the edge in terms of
spaciousness. The OMNI 60s put music throughout the room in an amazing way. The VR-1
counters, though, with deeper and punchier bass. That deeper bass means you can get away
without using a sub with the VR-1. Remember, though, that the VR-1 costs almost double the
price of the OMNI 60s. For more money, Mirage does make the OMNI 250 and OMNI 260
floorstanding speakers, and these would make for a fairer comparison.

The next biggest difference comes in terms of immediacy.
The VR-1, like many front-firing speakers, sounds more lively and visceral, particularly
in the midrange and top end. The imaging, while not necessarily more spacious, is also
more precise. While I dont characterize the OMNI 60 as laid-back, its
certainly not as in your face as most traditional front-firing speakers, including the
VR-1. As I said earlier, with such a radical design as the OMNI 60, its not
surprising to also encounter a sonic signature that is a fair bit different from the
competition's.

Conclusion

Mirages 2002 release of the $500/pair
OMNISATs marked the debut of 360-radiating-type loudspeakers into the
"affordable" speaker arena; however, for all intents and purposes, the OMNISAT
needs a subwoofer and cant be called a standalone speaker system. Its the OMNI
60 (and lower-priced, smaller OMNI 50, too), then, that really marks the beginnings of
Omnipolar technology at a price where more people can partake of it.

The OMNI 60 has certain things in common with
good-quality front-firing speakers, but by virtue of its technology, it has an easily
identifiable signature. The strengths of this design are a very spacious sound that can
fill a room as few other speakers can, and also a surprisingly neutral presentation given
the unique technology. Add to these the refined-sounding top end and the distinctive looks
and you have a speaker that grabs attention.

So if you are shopping for two-way bookshelf-type
speakers around $600 in price, try to at least hear these or the others in the OMNI lineup
before you buy something else. These OMNI speakers may have you rethinking how a
loudspeaker should be designed, much like the M1 did back in the late 80s.